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Benjamin's avatar

Hey Noah,

Good post. A couple of small points that I feel you could emphasize a bit more when looking at the global situation:

- The US has instituted an export ban on vaccines. That may be understandable, but it also leaves other countries out in the cold - Canada, for example, had no choice but to order in Europe.

- The UK for its part has not instituted an official export ban, but its contract details with major manufacturers (especially AstraZeneca) amount to just that for the doses procured in the UK.

- The EU - for all its slow rollout - is the only major world region that currently permits large amounts of “Western” vaccine to be exported - Israel's vaccine miracle for example was only possible because Pfizer-Biontech provided the vaccines from their factory in Puurs, Belgium.

- Other vaccine exporters are China and Russia, but on a far, far smaller and more select scale.

- The USA is truly leading with mRNA technology, but arguably alongside Germany and thus Europe, home to Biontech (which developed the Pfizer-Biontech vaccine) and Curevac and others.

- There weren't really any major fights about vaccine distribution in the EU this time around, the joint vaccine procurement process was set up precisely to prevent that (successfully) and avoid pitting small countries against big counties (successful too) - where the EU failed is going big early for helping production to ramp up, no matter the cost. That's what's ailing its rollout now.

Overall, the US rollout was and is truly a success story, particularly the ability to scale up production early. But one shouldn't forget the still applying vaccine export ban and that its current main vaccine, the Pfizer-Biontech, was a European-American co-production.

Best,

Ben

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Scott Williams's avatar

Does that mean the US actually gets at least something for spending twice as much on healthcare as everything be else?

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